|
Cessnock is a city in the Hunter Valley region of New South Wales, Australia in Cessnock City Council. The local area once known as "The Coalfields" is now the gateway city and service centre to the vineyards of the Hunter Valley, which includes Pokolbin, Mount View, Broke, Rothbury, and Branxton. Capital Sydney Government Constitutional monarchy Governor Professor Marie Bashir Premier Morris Iemma (ALP) Federal representation - House seats 50 - Senate seats 12 Gross State Product (2004-05) - Product ($m) $305,437 (1st) - Product per capita $45,153/person (4th) Population (End of March 2006) - Population 6,817,100 (1st) - Density 8. ...
Australian postcodes have four digits; envelopes for posting from Australia reflect this. ...
Basic Definition In geography, the elevation of a geographic location is its height above mean sea level (or some other fixed point). ...
Map of Local Government Areas in New South Wales Types of LGAs in New South Wales The Local Government Areas of New South Wales, Australia have been subject to periodic bouts of restructuring and rationalisation by the State Government, involving voluntary and involuntary amalgamation of areas. ...
Cessnock can refer to: Cessnock, New South Wales Cessnock, Glasgow This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ...
State Electoral District is a term used to refer to a voting area within Australian states. ...
Cessnock is an electoral district of the Legislative Assembly in the Australian state of New South Wales. ...
Upper Hunter is an electoral district of the Legislative Assembly in the Australian state of New South Wales. ...
The Australian House of Representatives is elected from 150 single-member districts called Divisions. ...
The Division of Hunter is an Australian Electoral Division in the state of New South Wales. ...
Celsius is, or relates to, the Celsius temperature scale (previously known as the centigrade scale). ...
Fahrenheit is a temperature scale named after the German physicist Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit (1686â1736), who proposed it in 1724. ...
Celsius is, or relates to, the Celsius temperature scale (previously known as the centigrade scale). ...
Fahrenheit is a temperature scale named after the German physicist Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit (1686â1736), who proposed it in 1724. ...
The metre or meter is a measure of length. ...
An inch (plural: inches; symbol or abbreviation: in or, sometimes, â³ - a double prime) is the name of a unit of length in a number of different systems, including English units, Imperial units, and United States customary units. ...
The Hunter Valley is a region of New South Wales, approximately 160 kilometres north of Sydney, Australia with an approximate population of 700,000 people, most of which live in the Newcastle metropolitan area. ...
Capital Sydney Government Constitutional monarchy Governor Professor Marie Bashir Premier Morris Iemma (ALP) Federal representation - House seats 50 - Senate seats 12 Gross State Product (2004-05) - Product ($m) $305,437 (1st) - Product per capita $45,153/person (4th) Population (End of March 2006) - Population 6,817,100 (1st) - Density 8. ...
Cessnock can refer to: Cessnock, New South Wales Cessnock, Glasgow This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ...
Geography
The town is located in the rich alluvial and volcanic soils of the Hunter Valley. Rich coal seams underly much of the area. The Brokenback Range (part of the Great Dividing Range) rises to the West of the city. The Hunter River flows down the Hunter Valley approximately 20 km to the North.
History The transition to wine service centre from a once prosperous mining town has been a long and at times difficult process. Cessnock lies between Australia’s earliest European settlements - Sydney, the Hawkesbury and the Hunter. Lying on the land route between these important settlements, it provided early European contact with Indigenous people, who have inhabited the Cessnock area for more than 3,000 years. The Darkinjung people were the major inhabitants at the time of European contact, which subsequently proved to be disastrous for the Darkinjung tribe. Many were killed or died as a result of European diseases. Others were forced onto neighbouring tribal territory and killed. The City of Cessnock abounds in Indigenous place names and names with Indigenous association which is indicative of this settlement and include Congewai, Kurri Kurri, Laguna, Nulkaba and Wollombi. Pastoralists commenced settling the land in the 1820’s. The township of Cessnock developed from 1850, as a service centre at the junction of the Great North Road from Sydney to the Hunter Valley, with branches to Singleton and Maitland. During the 1860’s, land settlement was extensive between Nulkaba and Pokolbin, with wheat, tobacco and grapes the principal crops. The establishment of the South Maitland coalfields generated extensive land settlement between 1903 and 1923. The current pattern of urban development, transport routes and industrial landscape was laid at this time. The surveying of the Greta coal seam by Professor Edgeworth David around 1888 became the impetus for considerable social and economic change in the area with the development of the coal mining industry. The South Maitland coalfields was the most extensive coalfield in New South Wales until the great coal mining slump of the 1960s. ...
Sir Tannant William Edgeworth David (January 28, 1858 - August 28, 1934 was an Australian geologist and explorer. ...
Whilst mining was the principal industrial base and source of employment in the Cessnock area for the first half of this century, a slump which commenced about 1960 forced the closure of many mines. Subsequent changes to the mining industry, including automation and the introduction of sophisticated computerised equipment, led to the closure of the vast majority of the remaining mines in the area. This has resulted in a decline in population in many villages and townships over the last twenty years which has lead to the closure of some schools, shops and community meeting places. Consequently, many areas have undergone a change in character, with rural residential housing developments becoming popular, as well as small cottages and farms used principally as weekend retreats.
Economy The decline of mining and eventual closure of the South Maitland Railway has been paralleled by growth in the wine industry and better access to other employment centres. The Hunter Valley wine-growing area near Cessnock is Australia's oldest wine region and one of the most famous, with around 4,500 acres under vine. The vineyards of Pokolbin, Mount View and Allandale, with their rich volcanic soils tended by entrepreneurial vignerons, are also the focus of a thriving and growing tourism industry. The extension and eventual completion of the F3 Freeway, created a property and tourism boom in during the 1990s. Pokolbin is the centre of the famous Hunter Valley wine region in New South Wales, Australia. ...
Cessnock has begun to develop other tourist ventures beyond the wine industry such as championship golf courses, hot air ballooning, sky-diving, and guest house accommodation. The town has long suffered from a relatively poor reputation in New South Wales due to issues relating to crime and unemployment. The town is also rather unattractive - a legacy of its functionality rather than appearance as a mining centre. The city council has actively pursued a policy of urban renewal in the city centre since 2001. The local council was one of the first to introduce a recycling program for waste disposal in the state. Most employment comes from the local port city of Newcastle, the nearby major centres of Maitland and Singleton and in service industries in the local council area, which comprises many small towns, such as Kurri Kurri, Weston, Neath, Abernethy, Kearsley, and Pokolbin. Newcastle CBD Newcastle is the seventh largest and the second oldest city in Australia [1] and the second largest in the state of New South Wales. ...
Maitland is a city in the Lower Hunter region of New South Wales, Australia and the seat of Maitland City Council. ...
Location of Singleton in New South Wales (red) Singleton is a town and Local Government Area (see Singleton Shire Council) on the banks of the Hunter River in New South Wales, Australia. ...
Education High Schools in Cessnock: Primary Schools in Cessnock: Thorndike, Maine Homepage ...
- Cessnock Public School
- Nulkaba Public School
- Cessnock East Public School
- Cessnock West Public School
- Kearsley Public School
- St Patricks Primary
Sport The city has many sporting facilities. The city competes in several regional sporting competitions, particularly the Newcastle based leagues of various sports. Some very successful sporting players can trace their roots to the local district, including Australian Rugby League representative players and brothers Andrew and Matthew Johns. Golf Tournaments are often held on the local championship courses of Pokolbin. This article is about the rugby league player. ...
Matthew Johns (born July 27, 1971 in Cessnock, New South Wales) is an Australian entertainer who had previously enjoyed a successful career in rugby league alongside his younger brother Andrew Johns. ...
Transport For a century Cessnock was served by a very extensive railway network, originally constructed for the coal industry, but which, at one time, had considerable passenger services, including a direct train to Sydney. The network was finally closed down in 1985. The Sydney Opera House on Sydney Harbour Sydney (pronounced ) is the most populous city in Australia, with a metropolitan area population of over 4,200,000 people, and 151,920 in the City of Sydney. ...
Year 1985 (MCMLXXXV) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link displays 1985 Gregorian calendar). ...
The F3 Freeway's Cessnock exit at Freeman's Waterhole provides one of the main road connections from Sydney to Cessnock via "The Gap", a pass through the Wattagan mountain range just north of Mt Heaton. A new freeway linking the New England Highway at Branxton and the Sydney-Newcastle Freeway at West Wallsend is planned to be built in the near future, which will bypass Cessnock. Less traffic will take pressure off the local roads and provide easier access to Pokolbin from Sydney and Newcastle. The freeway is National Highway 1 Approximate road distances (in kilometres) of towns and cities along the Sydney-Newcastle Freeway from Sydney The Sydney-Newcastle Freeway is a 127km stretch of freeway linking Sydney to the Central Coast, Newcastle and Hunter regions of New South Wales and is part of...
Approximate road distances (in kilometres) of towns and cities along the Sydney-Newcastle Freeway from Sydney The Sydney-Newcastle Freeway is a 127km stretch of motorway linking Sydney to the Central Coast, Newcastle and Hunter regions of New South Wales and is part of the AusLink road corridor between Sydney...
The local airport is placed just to the north of the city, at the entrance to the Vineyard District. It has a small public passenger terminal and also serves as the base for aviation training organisations such as Avondale College's school of Aviation and Hunter Valley Aviation. The airport is not served by RPT flights. Access by air to the region is by Newcastle Airport based at Williamtown (over 50 km away), and includes direct services from Brisbane, Sydney, and Melbourne. Avondale College is an Australian tertiary education provider affiliated with the Seventh-day Adventist Church. ...
The local bus service is run by Rover Motors who provide services to Maitland, Newcastle, Sydney as well as local School Bus services.
Notable locals Rugby league legends Andrew and Matthew Johns was born here. Doug Daft, 60, the former high school maths teacher from Cessnock became one of the highest-paid Australian executives in history - headed Coca Cola internationally. This article is about the rugby league player. ...
Matthew Johns (born July 27, 1971 in Cessnock, New South Wales) is an Australian entertainer who had previously enjoyed a successful career in rugby league alongside his younger brother Andrew Johns. ...
See also Cessnock Correctional Centre is a mimimum security Australian prison located in Cessnock, New South Wales, Australia. ...
References Coordinates: 32°50′S, 151°21′E Australian Bureau of Statistics logo The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) is the Australian government agency that collects and publishes statistical information about Australia. ...
For the Manfred Mann album, see 2006 (album). ...
November 29 is the 333rd day of the year (334th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
The Bureau of Meteorology is an Australian government organisation responsible for providing weather services to Australia and surrounding areas. ...
For the Manfred Mann album, see 2006 (album). ...
November 29 is the 333rd day of the year (334th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Map of Earth showing lines of latitude (horizontally) and longitude (vertically), Eckert VI projection; large version (pdf, 1. ...
Capital: Sydney Cities: Albury · Armidale · Bathurst · Blue Mountains · Broken Hill · Cessnock · Coffs Harbour · Dubbo · Gosford · Goulburn · Grafton · Griffith · Lismore · Lithgow · Maitland · Newcastle · Nowra · Orange · Queanbeyan · Tamworth · Wagga Wagga · Wollongong Capital Sydney Government Constitutional monarchy Governor Professor Marie Bashir Premier Morris Iemma (ALP) Federal representation - House seats 50 - Senate seats 12 Gross State Product (2004-05) - Product ($m) $305,437 (1st) - Product per capita $45,153/person (4th) Population (End of March 2006) - Population 6,817,100 (1st) - Density 8. ...
The Sydney Opera House on Sydney Harbour Sydney (pronounced ) is the most populous city in Australia, with a metropolitan area population of over 4,200,000 people, and 151,920 in the City of Sydney. ...
Albury is a city in New South Wales, Australia, located on the Hume Highway on the Northern side of the Murray River. ...
Armidale (population 28,000) is a university and cathedral city in northern New South Wales, Australia, in Armidale Dumaresq Council. ...
Bathurst is a regional centre in the state of New South Wales, Australia approximately 200km west of Sydney and is the seat of the Bathurst Regional Council Local Government Area. ...
The Three Sisters are a top attraction of the city The City of Blue Mountains is a local government area of New South Wales, Australia, governed by the Blue Mountains City Council. ...
This article or section is not written in the formal tone expected of an encyclopedia article. ...
For the state electoral district, see Electoral district of Coffs Harbour. ...
Aerial image of Dubbo viewed from the southeast For the seat in the New South Wales Legislative Assembly, see Electoral district of Dubbo. ...
Gosford is the main city of the Central Coast of New South Wales, located approximately 50 km north of the Sydney Central Business District (CBD) in a straight line, but somewhat further by road due to the shape of the coastline. ...
Location of Goulburn in New South Wales (red) Court house opened 1887 Goulburn is a provincial cathedral city in the Southern Tablelands of New South Wales, Australia in Goulburn Mulwaree Council. ...
</ref> | est = 1851 | elevation = 5 | maxtemp = 25. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Left Bank Cafe, Spinks Park. ...
Lithgow is a city of approximately 18750 persons situated in central-west New South Wales, Australia and is also a Local Government Area. ...
Maitland is a city in the Lower Hunter region of New South Wales, Australia and the seat of Maitland City Council. ...
Newcastle CBD Newcastle is the seventh largest and the second oldest city in Australia [1] and the second largest in the state of New South Wales. ...
Nowra shops Nowra park Nowra is the commercial and main administrative centre for the City of Shoalhaven region in New South Wales, Australia. ...
Orange is a provincial city and Local Government Area of New South Wales, Australia. ...
Queanbeyan sign Queanbeyan is a city in south eastern New South Wales, Australia. ...
Tamworth is a city in the New England region of New South Wales, Australia. ...
Wagga Wagga (pronounced wogga wogga, informally called Wagga) is a city in New South Wales, Australia. ...
Wollongong is the 3rd largest city in the state of New South Wales, Australia, after Sydney and Newcastle. ...
|